She added that returning to engagement did not presuppose an outcome and that she hoped it would set "a new threshold for what we expect of these projects."

Coun. Aaron Paquette was concerned about the language but said he supported the second amendment added by Coun. Ben Henderson, which asks administration report to council to consider whether the location is essential.

"Our job is a land use job right now," Paquette said. "Our job isn't to go and facilitate a conversation between Epcor and Enoch Cree Nation, that's not the city's job here."

The Epcor project had already made it past most regulatory hurdles, securing support from city administration and approval from provincial bodies such as the Alberta Utilities Commission and Alberta Culture and Tourism.

Craig Bonneville, the project director for Epcor, said after the meeting the utilities company is ready to engage with the Enoch Cree Nation.

"We haven't heard a lot of detail on their reasoning but we fully intend on reaching out very quickly to understand that and work collaboratively with them," he said.

Environmental concerns

Environmentalists oppose the project and were among those who spoke during public hearings.

Charles Richmond, urban issues coordinator of the environmental group Sierra Club Canada Foundation, said the decision was "moving in a good direction" but was critical of the continued focus on that location.

"All of this could have been settled if council did remove the locale, then there could've been some negotiation and a new proposal and everyone would come out looking good," Richmond said.

While Epcor owns the land adjacent to the water treatment plant, the land is currently zoned as a metropolitan recreation and environmental protection zone. The company had requested the zoning be changed to a "direct development control provision" to permit the development of a utility service.

Under that provision, the city would retain some control of what the final development would look like, including provisions for landscaping and fencing.

Epcor says the project aligns with city goals to secure more energy from renewable sources.

Edmonton's Energy Transition Strategy has an objective of generating 10 per cent of the city's electricity locally by 2035.

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